17 entries match your criteria.
Historical Markers and War Memorials in Fluvanna County, Virginia
Adjacent to Fluvanna County, Virginia
▶ Albemarle County (83) ▶ Buckingham County (29) ▶ Cumberland County (21) ▶ Goochland County (23) ▶ Louisa County (34)
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at County Route 656, on the right when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | The nearby Bremo properties include three separate houses, all built by planter, soldier and reformer Gen. John Hartwell Cocke (1780 - 1866) on his family's 1725 land grant. The three properties - Bremo, Lower Bremo, and Recess - and their . . . — — Map (db m28070) HM |
| On East River Road (Virginia Route 6) 0.9 miles east of Bremo Road (Virginia Route 656), on the right when traveling east. |
| | Here was an important supply depot and arsenal of the Virginia government in 1781, and here Baron von Steuben, commanding the American forces, trained recruits for Green's army in the South. Threatened by Cornwallis's approach, Steuben moved stores . . . — — Map (db m31602) HM |
| On East River Road (Virginia Route 6) 0.9 miles east of Bremo Road (Virginia Route 656), on the right when traveling east. |
| | Rassawek, the principal town of the Monacan Indians, stood nearby, according to Capt. John Smith's 1612 map of Virginia. Several smaller satellite villages were located within a few miles of Rassawek. The Monacans, who belonged to the Siouan . . . — — Map (db m31603) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at State Highway 6, on the right when traveling north on James Madison Highway. |
| | In honor of the men and women of Fluvanna County who served in World Wars I and II — — Map (db m31354) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at Virginia Route 6, on the left when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | Four miles southeast is Point of Fork, near which an Indian village stood in 1607. In the Revolution a state arsenal was there. In June, 1781, Simcoe, sent by Cornwallis with a small force to destroy the stores there, succeeded in making Baron . . . — — Map (db m17760) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at West River Road (State Highway 6), on the right when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | Memorial to Abraham SeayIn 1745 Abraham Seay, French Huguenot settler was granted Leters Patent from King George for land which includes these church grounds, Military Academy campus, and the nucleus of the village of Fork Union. Abraham, his son . . . — — Map (db m31355) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) 0.2 miles north of W River Road (Virginia Route 6), on the right when traveling south. |
| | First classes of Fork Union Academy were held here October 15, 1898 in the residence of Susie Payne Cooper. Established as a co-educational English and classical school, it became Fork Union Military Academy for boys in 1903. Organized by 10 . . . — — Map (db m12329) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at West River Road (Virginia Route 6), on the right when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | Fork Union Baptist Church was constituted in
1798. Presbyterian, Episcopal, Methodist,
and Baptist congregations shared as a place
of worship the current church, built in 1824
and first known as the Brick Meetinghouse.
Gen. John Hartwell Cocke, . . . — — Map (db m18302) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) just south of West River Road (Virginia Route 6), on the left when traveling south. |
| | Founded in 1898 by Dr. William E. Hatcher with the assistance of Charles G. Snead, Fork Union Academy established military training as part of the curriculum in 1902. It served as a coeducational school until 1909, when the trustees transformed it . . . — — Map (db m18307) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) 0.1 miles south of Carysbrook Road (Virginia Route 615), on the right when traveling south. |
| | The Rev. John Jasper, one of the best known black preachers of the 19th century in Virginia was born a slave in Fluvanna County on 4 July 1812. After working in a tobacco factory, Jasper had a religious awakening in the later 1830s and became a . . . — — Map (db m12275) HM |
| On Three Notch Road (U.S. 250) west of Three Chopt Road (Virginia Route 653), on the right when traveling east. |
| | (obverse)
Fluvanna County
Area 285 Square Miles
Formed in 1777 from Albemarle. Named (in Latin) Anne's River, the early name for the upper James given in honor of Queen Anne. Point of Fork was an important supply depot in 1781. . . . — — Map (db m54220) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) 0.2 miles north of Hayden Martin Road, on the right. |
| | J. B. “Texas Jack” Omohundro was born at Pleasure Hill Farm about 1 mile west of here on July 26, 1846. At age 17 he served as a scout under the command of General J.E.B. Stuart. Later he was renowned as a scout and heroic plainsman of . . . — — Map (db m116884) HM |
| On Main Street (County Route 1001) at County Route 1003, on the right when traveling north on Main Street. |
| | To the memory of The Confederate soldiers of Fluvanna County 1861-1865. — — Map (db m31360) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at Courthouse Road (Virginia Route 601), on the right when traveling north on James Madison Highway. |
| | The Fluvanna County Courthouse is one of the few in the state to retain its original configuration. Fluvanna County was formed from part of Albemarle County in 1777 with the county seat located on the southeast side of the Rivanna River. In 1828 . . . — — Map (db m11591) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at Central Plains Road (Virginia Route 649), on the right when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | Fluvanna County dedicated its only African American High School on 21 Nov. 1936 and named it the S.C. Abrams High School to honor the Rev. Samuel Christopher Abrams, who served as the county supervisor for the black schools and also as minister in . . . — — Map (db m11706) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) at Friendship Road (County Route 644), on the right when traveling south on James Madison Highway. |
| | Close by, May 18, 1779, “at Roger Thompson’s, near the Broken-Back Church,” began the “Regular” Methodist Conference composed of some of the most devoted and successful Methodist preachers, a large majority of the whole. . . . — — Map (db m16917) HM |
| On James Madison Highway (U.S. 15) just south of Three Notch Road (U.S. 250), on the right when traveling south. |
| | Louisa County. Located in the heart of the Virginia Piedmont,
this rural county was named for Louisa,
a daughter of George II. It was formed
from Hanover county in 1742, the county
seat is Louisa. Among the county’s historic
resources is . . . — — Map (db m17751) HM |